Hi Jeremy,
I remember seeing this is the documentation, the section about Host HA, is just 
a duplication of VM HA. I think this was copied and pasted in error by the 
author.
For Host HA to work, you would need at least 3 hosts, all with Out of band 
management enabled.
Regards
Darrin


On 2021/06/11 09:03:03, Jeremy Hansen <j...@skidrow.la> wrote:
>
> I'm trying to play with HA.  I've enabled it via the interface but the HA 
> state is labeled as Ineligible.>
>
> I'm specifically interested in this:>
>
> HA for Hosts>
>
> The user can specify a virtual machine as HA-enabled. By default, all virtual 
> router VMs and Elastic Load Balancing VMs are automatically configured as 
> HA-enabled. When an HA-enabled VM crashes, CloudStack detects the crash and 
> restarts the VM automatically within the same Availability Zone. HA is never 
> performed across different Availability Zones. CloudStack has a conservative 
> policy towards restarting VMs and ensures that there will never be two 
> instances of the same VM running at the same time. The Management Server 
> attempts to start the VM on another Host in the same cluster.>

>
>
> My assumption is if a VM Host dies, whatever guests that were running on that 
> host would automatically move to an available VM host.  Maybe I'm 
> misinterpreting.>

>
> Thanks>
> -jeremy>
>

 

Reply via email to